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Tuesday, 13 November 2018

This is what EFCC boss said when he was asked about Tinubu’s alleged corruption

Here is what EFCC boss, Ibrahim Magu said when he was asked about allegations of corruption thrown at APC national leader, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.


Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ibrahim Magu, found himself in an awkward position on Monday, November 12, 2018, when a journalist asked him about corruption allegations often aimed at APC national leader, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Magu was giving a scorecard of his agency’s work at a press conference which held at the EFCC headquarters in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.
Afterwards, journalists assailed the anti-corruption czar with questions.

"When would Magu probe Tinubu?"

‘When will Magu probe Tinubu who had claimed, ahead of the Osun governorship election, that he was richer than the entire Southwest state?', one journalist inquired.
Tinubu belongs to the president’s governing political party and allegations bordering on the source of his wealth since he left office as governor of Lagos in 2007, have dominated grapevine and beer parlour chatter for decades.
The allegations remain unproven, however.
Responding, Magu said he can only act on allegations contained in a petition, and not on hearsay.
And then he challenged the journalist to forward him a petition containing Tinubu’s alleged dubious dealings and illicit accumulation of wealth.
“You know what? If you are really interested, write a petition and see whether I won’t act. Go and write a petition and substantiate in the petition and find out if I won’t act.
“It is not for us to listen to people on radio and begin to act. Yes, we have intelligence but the surest way to get action is to go and write a petition and substantiate the contents of the petition and see whether I will not act", Magu said.

Governor Ganduje's 'bribe video' also got a mention

Magu was also asked about the bribery allegation levelled against Kano State Governor Abdullahi Ganduje.
Ganduje has been shown in a series of videos receiving kickbacks in dollars from contractors working on infrastructure projects in Kano.
The governor has described the videos as “cloned”, “doctored” and “politically motivated”.
The Kano State House of Assembly has been investigating the authenticity of the videos.
When Magu was asked if his agency would investigate the videos and corruption allegations levelled against the governor, he dismissed the question.
“Next question please”, Magu told a journalist who asked the anti-graft czar to comment on the issue.
President Muhammadu Buhari who won the 2015 election partly on the back of a promise to crack down on endemic graft in Africa’s most populous nation, has also not publicly commented on the Ganduje videos.

Tinubu has been arraigned for alleged corruption before

In 2011, Tinubu was docked at the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) for allegedly operating 10 foreign accounts during his spell as governor between 1999 and 2007.
However, the tribunal swiftly dismissed the case against the former Lagos governor after it established that the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) did not establish a prima facie case against him.
CCT Chairman Danladi Umar also ruled at the time that the prosecution abused the process of filing the charges against Tinubu and that “the accused should have been invited to either admit or deny the charge. The complainant has no evidence to show that they invited the accused.
The three-man panel of the tribunal dismissed the case at Tinubu's second appearance, declaring that “there is no significant basis to proceed against Tinubu as the charges were defective and shoddy".
Umar had added that "some (of the foreign accounts) even bear female names…how can the accused be made to answer such charges?”
Tinubu hasn't been charged for corruption since his CCT appearance.

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